Start-ups will soon be able to take loans of up to Rs 5 crore without collateral through a credit guarantee scheme prepared by the government.
The scheme is awaiting cabinet approval and is likely to become functional soon under the supervision of the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion.
“The scheme will help us address the most basic challenge of startups: access to capital. The corpus of the fund will also be guaranteed by the government,” a senior official told.
The government is looking at ways to increase availability of finance to start-ups. The credit guarantee scheme would help the flow of “venture debt from the formal banking system.”
The government will provide up to 80% risk cover for collateral-free credit given by banks to start-ups.
The department had invited suggestions from stakeholders including start-ups, venture capital funds and angel investors on ways to increase availability of credit for start-ups.
The Startup Action Plan announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January 2016 mentioned that a credit guarantee mechanism through the National Credit Guarantee Trust Company or the Small Industries Development Bank of India will have a budgetary corpus of Rs 500 crore per year for the next four years.
The idea of such a fund was to leverage the institutional credit structure to reach out to underserved sectors, including Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and women entrepreneurs.
Start-ups must meet the criteria defined for them by the department to access any benefit announced in the Startup India Action Plan last year, including loans under the credit guarantee scheme.
The government relaxed tax conditions for startups in the Budget for FY2017-18, allowing companies incorporated after March 31, 2016, to avail of a three year tax holiday in the first seven years of their existence. Earlier, this facility could be availed only for the first five years.
The government is talking to public sector units to ensure that startups are not excluded from their procurement tendering process for lack of experience.
The department is also monitoring the disbursal of money from the fund of funds by SIDBI for start-ups.
Source: The Economic Times